New course helps hair and beauty industry to ‘Spot a Spot’ and save a life

The NSW Government has launched a new online course to equip the hair and beauty industry with the skills to start a conversation about skin changes that could save a life.


Developed by TAFE NSW in conjunction with the Australian Melanoma Research Foundation, Hair and Beauty Australia (HABA), and Keune Australia, the ‘Spot a Spot’ course is the first in Australia to target hairdressers, barbers and beauticians to increase early awareness and prevention of skin cancer.

Minister for Health Ryan Park said:

“Australia has some of the highest melanoma rates in the world, but we know that 90 per cent of melanomas can be treated successfully if caught early.”

“The NSW Government is committed to increasing the rates of early detection of melanoma in the battle against skin cancer, and this is a great initiative to help people detect the early signs of this potentially-deadly disease.”

NSW Minister for Skills, TAFE and Tertiary Education Tim Crakanthorp said:

“One Australian is diagnosed with melanoma every 30 minutes and it results in around 1300 deaths every year.”

“But we know early detection matters, which is why this new course is a great example of TAFE NSW working with industry to identify skills needs and fast-tracking solutions that benefit, not only the workforce but the wider community.”

“By offering free places for TAFE NSW apprentices studying Certificate III in Hairdressing and Barbering and Certificate IV in Beauty, we’re working to equip the next generation with the skills to have these important conversations.”

Maureen Harding, the National President of HABA, said:

“I’ve been a hairdresser for 50 years and have had these conversations with my clients, including ones that turned out to have lifesaving outcomes.” 

“What’s great about this course is that it can be completed in an hour and on a mobile device. It offers practical information about what makes a spot suspicious and different ways to start a conversation with a client about a subject that can be very scary.”

Dr Wayne Harvey from the Australian Melanoma Research Foundation said:

“Early detection of melanoma is associated with high survival rates. Hairdressers and barbers are in regular contact with their clients and access hard-to-see spots, so they are very well placed to recognise skin changes.”

“Helping the industry to develop the skills to recognise a suspicious spot and then confidently talk about skin changes with their clients has the potential to significantly contribute to reducing the incidence of melanoma long term.”

The story aired on 7 News, Sunday 18 June: NSW TAFE hair and beauty students being trained on how to spot skin cancers on customerslaunch.

Community consultation to honour contemporary veterans

The NSW Government has commenced consultation with contemporary veterans and their families to seek feedback on how their service can be further acknowledged.


The survey is an important step to hear directly from the veteran community in response to the proposal to establish a new memorial to honour their service and sacrifice.

The NSW Office for Veterans Affairs is leading the consultation process which includes an online survey for veterans of recent operations, as well as forums to enable further discussion once the survey results have been analysed.

The information received from the survey and community consultation will complement the current NSW Government Veterans Strategy and Actional Plan which is in place until the end of 2024.

Minister for Veterans David Harris said:

“The NSW Government values our veteran community and is working hard to ensure that veterans and their families are acknowledged and supported.

“I encourage all veterans from recent conflicts and peacekeeping operations to share their thoughts via an online survey so we can hear what the community values as an important way to honour their service.

“The survey is completely anonymous, and it is important that veterans and their families share their views with us. The results will be analysed, and the data will then help inform us about the needs and wishes of our veteran community.

“This could be a new memorial to honour contemporary service, a living and interactive memorial space that veterans and their families can use, or other ideas.”

The survey will be open for another 2 weeks and closes on Sunday 9 July 2023.

Get more information at Veterans Affairslaunch.

KoreaTown Eastwood set to pop

Fans of K-Pop, KBBQ and Korean dance can celebrate as the vision of a group of Eastwood locals comes alive. On Rowe Street Eastwood a determined project group are working to share and enjoy these popular elements of Korean culture and much more with the wider community.


The project, funded by NSW Government, has been named “KoreaTown” and their vision for Eastwood includes K-Pop music festivals, street-dancing, Korean traditional dance performances, baked goods, Korean cuisine and night markets served up to a thriving night-time precinct around the clock.

KoreaTown is just one of 21 new projects supported by the NSW Government’s Uptown program. This program was brought in to encourage local businesses to collaborate and build a self-sustainable cultural district. Each district was then given tools and resources to brand their project and brought to the table their ideas. The goal is to create a vibrant area that is to be enjoyed by locals and visitors all year round.

Minister for Music and the Night-Time Economy John Graham said the Korean Community of Commerce will use the $198,200 Uptown grant to bring their vision of marketing Eastwood as ‘KoreaTown’ to life.

“The KoreaTown district team will use this funding to commence an advertising campaign with the goal of attracting four million visitors to Eastwood to enjoy the great food, entertainment and Korean goods on offer” Mr Graham said.

“Ideas like this will not only enhance our state’s global reputation, but it will also highlight the vibrant, diverse, and exciting opportunities available to visitors and residents across Greater Sydney.”

Moko Eastwood owner and KoreaTown representative Jong Hoon Park said Rowe Street, Eastwood was already home to 120 Korean shops and restaurants.

“We are only a small street, but we are full of Korean culture, and we want to encourage more people to come and experience what we have to offer,” Mr Park said.

“The Uptown grant will allow our collective to hire a marketing agency to promote Eastwood as KoreaTown through partnerships that will showcase our offering whether daytime or into the night.”

NSW 24-Hour Economy Commissioner Michael Rodrigues said KoreaTown was just one of the great district visions for Sydney to come out of the Uptown program this year.

“Uptown will help these districts to deliver brilliant night-time experiences that will enhance greater Sydney’s rich social fabric and bring more visitors to these great locations,” Mr Rodrigues said.

For more information visit Uptown grant programlaunch.

BACKGROUND

Over the last few years, Ryde Council recognised the areas need for its own identity, formally referring to the area as KoreaTown and installing a new car park to accommodate the influx of visitors to the area.

Among the 21 Uptown recipients are Little India Harris Park Business Association (City of Parramatta), an LGBTQIA+ Rainbow District in Darlinghurst (City of Sydney), as well as precincts in the Northern Beaches, Inner West, Hornsby, Woollahra and Blacktown councils.

Man charged over domestic and traffic incidents; police cars rammed – Port Stephens-Hunter PD 

A man will face court tomorrow after being charged with alleged serious domestic and traffic related offences on the state’s Mid North Coast. 

In March 2023, officers from Port Stephens-Hunter Police District commenced an investigation after a woman was allegedly assaulted by a man known to her at Upper Allyn. 

When the 37-year-old man was unable to be located by officers, a warrant was issued for his arrest and police commenced inquiries into his whereabouts.

On Friday 2 June 2023, police were called to John Hunter Hospital after a woman had presented with serious injuries requiring surgery.

Further inquiries suggest the woman had allegedly been kidnapped by the man six weeks earlier and was held against her will.

About 5pm the next day (Saturday 3 June 2023), the man allegedly assaulted officers during an attempted arrest, before he fled the scene in a Jeep Cherokee towing a camper trailer.

Police attempted to stop the vehicle on Kendall Street in Bellbird; however, when the vehicle failed to stop as directed, a pursuit was initiated.

The pursuit continued through Kulnura, where the Jeep swerved to avoid road spikes and collided with a tree, causing the trailer to separate from the vehicle. The pursuit was terminated shortly after due to safety concerns. 

Just before 5pm yesterday (Friday 23 June 2023), an off-duty officer observed the man travelling in an allegedly stolen Toyota Landcruiser on the New England Highway in East Maitland.

The man was followed to the carpark of Metford Railway Station where he was approached by police.

It will be alleged the man then rammed two police vehicles before rolling the Landcruiser. Two passengers in the vehicle suffered minor injuries.

The man was arrested and taken to Maitland Police Station, where he was assessed by paramedics and taken to hospital under police guard for assessment.

On his release from hospital, the man was returned to Maitland Police Station and charged with twenty-three offences including:

  • Two counts of common assault (DV),
  • Stalk/intimidate intend fear physical etc harm (domestic),
  • Take/detain person with intent to obtain advantage cause actual bodily harm (DV),
  • Four counts of assault occasioning actual bodily harm (DV),
  • Reckless grievous bodily harm (DV),
  • Two counts of use etc offensive weapon to prevent lawful detention,
  • Two counts of hinder or resist police officer in the execution of duty,
  • Two counts of assault police officer in execution of duty without actual bodily harm,
  • Police pursuit – not stop – drive dangerously,
  • Destroy or damage property,
  • Drive motor vehicle during disqualification period,
  • Two counts of dishonestly obtain property by deception,
  • Aggravated B&E & commit serious indictable offence-armed,
  • Take & drive conveyance w/o consent of owner, and
  • Drive recklessly/furiously or speed manner dangerous.

The Maitland man was refused bail and is due to appear at Newcastle Local Court on Sunday 25 June 2023.

Two senior constables – both males – suffered minor injuries during the arrest.

Investigations are continuing.

LABOR CAVES TO BIG BUSINESS ON TAX TRANSPARENCY

Labor has yet again done the bidding of big business and wound back its plans for tax transparency, showing who really pulls the levers in Australia, the Greens say.

“Just as they did with million dollar fines for dodgy bank executives, Labor is answering their corporate masters’ call when it comes to tax transparency,” Greens Economic Justice spokesperson Senator Nick McKim said.

“Australia could have had world leading laws on tax transparency, but those plans fall apart once big business gets on the phone to give this Government its marching orders.”

“The likes of PwC and the fossil fuel lobby have far too much say in how laws are written in this country, and it is largely thanks to their donations to the Labor and Liberal parties.”

“It is nothing less than entrenched corruption and state capture for big donors to political parties to be able to dictate the laws that will apply to them.”

Sanctions on persons involved in the downing of Flight MH17

The Australian Government has imposed targeted financial sanctions and travel bans on three persons involved in the downing of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17.

Australia has been working closely with the Netherlands and European Union to coordinate sanctions on those who were convicted by the District Court of The Hague in November 2022 for their contribution to the downing of Flight MH17 and the murder of all 298 individuals on board.

Today’s sanctions target Sergey Dubinskiy and Leonid Kharchenko, who were both found guilty by the District Court of The Hague. The third convicted perpetrator Igor Girkin, was sanctioned by Australia in 2014 for supporting separatist activity in eastern Ukraine.

Australia has also sanctioned Sergey Muchkaev, a Colonel with the Russian Armed Forces who in July 2014 was the Commander of the 53rd Anti-Aircraft Missile Brigade, which supplied the Buk-TELAR that downed Flight MH17.

As either separatist leaders within the so-called ‘People’s Republic of Donetsk’ at the time of the downing of Flight MH17, or a member of the Russian Armed Forces, the three people sanctioned today actively supported actions and policies that threatened the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine.

These sanctions demonstrate the Australian Government’s ongoing commitment to hold to account those responsible for the downing of Flight MH17.

Working closely with our partners, in particular the Netherlands, Australia is steadfast in our commitment to seek truth, justice and accountability for the victims of the downing of Flight MH17. We continue to pursue all avenues available to us.

Our thoughts remain with those who lost their lives, their families and loved ones.

City of Newcastle’s Enterprise Agreement paves the way for rest of NSW

A raft of progressive leave provisions and enhancements featured in City of Newcastle’s (CN) Enterprise Agreement (EA) 2023 is being extended to local government employees across NSW.

Up to 20 days of paid leave will be accessible to all NSW local government employees in domestic violence situations, along with Miscarriage Leave and a range of other initiatives offering employees greater support and flexibility if the proposed Local Government (State) Award 2023 is endorsed on 1 July.

Newcastle Lord Mayor Nuatali Nelmes, USU Official Luke Hutchinson with City of Newcastle workers at the Works Depot.

Returned service people will also be recognised by being granted paid leave to attend Remembrance Day and Anzac Day, whilst apprentices and trainees will be given a leg-up with 100 per cent of their tool allowance covered.

Newcastle Lord Mayor Nuatali Nelmes said CN’s industry-leading Enterprise Agreement 2023 has set the tone for the rest of the state in terms of a harmonious industrial sector across local government.

“As one of the first councils in NSW to lead the way in domestic violence leave provisions back in 2018, City of Newcastle is pleased to see the results of those successful negotiations presented to all local government employees in NSW,” Cr Nelmes said.

“The success of CN’s EA has challenged the rest of the Local Government sector to embrace the progressive elements of the agreement.”

City of Newcastle CEO Jeremy Bath said the outcome achieved for local government employees statewide is a testament to all parties involved.

“The inclusion of these new provisions in the proposed State Award is a great outcome for local government employees in NSW, the unions, delegates and ratepayers,” Mr Bath said.

“It’s wonderful to see the progressive benefits and employment conditions led by City of Newcastle’s EA now reflected in the proposed state Award, in addition to the Local Government sector’s commitment to inclusion, diversity and equity.”

USU Official Luke Hutchinson said the proposed Award reaffirms the USU’s long-standing history of delivering improved pay and conditions for all 50,000 workers employed throughout all Councils in NSW.

“This proposed Award provides improved workplace conditions that will enable optimum services for our community and delivers socially progressive conditions such as access to miscarriage leave, improved parental leave, improved workplace flexibility and improved family and domestic violence leave,” Mr Hutchinson said.

“Following the resolution of the City of Newcastle Enterprise Agreement in late 2022, the USU challenged the rest of the Local Government sector to embrace the progressive elements of this agreement.

“Most importantly, this proposed Award provided our members some instant relief to address the current inflation crisis impacting workers across our communities.”

APPOINTMENT OF NATIONAL CYBER SECURITY COORDINATOR

The Albanese Government has announced the appointment of Air Marshal Darren Goldie AM CSC as the inaugural National Cyber Security Coordinator.

Air Marshal Goldie has served his country with distinction for more than 30 years through various roles with the Royal Australian Air Force, most recently as Air Commander Australia.

As the Air Commander Australia, Air Marshal Goldie has been responsible for building capability and resilience for the Royal Australian Air Force. He has led the coordination of Defence responses to natural disasters and the COVID-19 pandemic.

Air Marshal Goldie has also held key leadership positions, including at the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet in 2020-21 providing strategic foreign policy advice to Government.

He will commence his term as the National Cyber Security Coordinator on 3 July 2023.

The National Cyber Security Coordinator, together with the National Office of Cyber Security, will drive forward the necessary work to ensure Australia is best positioned to respond to the opportunities and threats of the digital age.

The Coordinator will lead national cyber security policy, the coordination of responses to major cyber incidents, whole of Government cyber incident preparedness efforts and strengthening of Commonwealth cyber security capability.

The Coordinator will lead this work in collaboration with the Government’s key policy, operational and security agencies.

This builds on the Albanese Government’s commitment to deliver a 2023-2030 Australian Cyber Security Strategy and follows a Cyber Security Industry Roundtable hosted by the Prime Minister earlier this year.

Woman charged following unauthorised protest – Kooragang 

A woman has been charged following an unauthorised protest in Newcastle.

About 6am today (Friday 23 June 2023), emergency services were called to Egret Street, Kooragang, following reports a person had climbed on top of a reclaimer at Port Waratah.

Officers attached to Newcastle City Police District with assistance from Police Rescue, removed a 67-year-old woman.

She was arrested and taken to Newcastle Police Station, where she was charged with enter enclosed non-agricultural lands serious safety risk, enter/remain on major facility seriously disrupt use and breach of bail.

The woman was refused bail to attend Newcastle Local Court later today (Friday 23 June 2023).

CONSERVATIVES TEAM UP TO REINTRODUCE CASHLESS DEBIT CARD 2.0

The Greens have condemned the Labor party for betraying people on income support, most of whom are First Nations people, by reversing their election pledge to abolish the Cashless Debit Card.

Today, Labor and the Liberals teamed up to pass Labor’s new Income Management Reform Bill, which takes the legislative framework for the BasicsCard and applies it to the new ‘SmartCard’. The SmartCard is managed by the same company, Indue, who ran the Cashless Debit Card scheme, and is effectively the Cashless Debit Card by another name.

The Greens successfully negotiated for Labor support for amendments requiring Ministerial reports on the cost of the Indue SmartCard, reviews of the impact of the scheme by the Joint Parliamentary Committee on Human Rights, as well as oversight by the Community Affairs References Committee for any proposed expansion of compulsory income management.

While the Greens welcome the Parliament’s support in making a bad bill better, these measures were not enough to secure Greens support for this discriminatory bill.

Senator Janet Rice, Greens spokesperson for Social Services, said:

“Labor promised voters they would abolish the Cashless Debit Card. Now they’re rolling it out again, just with new branding.

“Between the Cashless Debit Card 2.0, the measly $2.85 a day increase to Jobseeker, and refusing to help renters during the worst housing crisis in generations, Labor has no business calling itself the party of the working class.

“The bills Labor are bringing to the Parliament ensure the housing crisis will get worse, abandon millions of renters to unlimited rent increases and poverty, and leave those already in poverty in dire situations.

“Labor have now gone further than the Liberals did in expanding the racist and entirely ineffective compulsory income management system. We don’t need another Conservative Party in this country.

“In the same week as securing the Voice referendum, Labor teamed up with the Coalition and PHON to pass a racist bill that overwhelmingly targets First Nations people, against the wishes of key First Nations organisations, including the Central Land Council and the Aboriginal Peak Organisations Northern Territory, that gave evidence to the bill’s inquiry. The hypocrisy is astounding.

“Despite Labor’s false claims, the bill is not a simple matter of improving technology. This is a sneaky and insidious bill that significantly expands the Minister’s power to roll out compulsory income management in new areas, and effectively allows the new Cashless Debit Card to apply nationally, despite Labor’s campaign against CDC in opposition.

“The only differences between Labor’s SmartCard and the Cashless Debit Card are its name and colour.

“Labor have betrayed their pledge to voters at the last election. Under the Labor Government, more than twenty thousand people are still trapped under compulsory income management. We need a voluntary system that genuinely supports people.

“Labor voted down the Greens amendment for a sunset clause that would have ensured an eventual end date to compulsory income management, which even the former Cashless Debit Card legislation had in place.

“While the Greens successfully negotiated with Labor to pass three amendments that ensure more transparency, accountability and Parliamentary oversight, it was not enough to ensure our support for what is ultimately a discriminatory, draconian bill that traps people in poverty.

“The Greens, advocates, academics, and people on income management will continue to pressure Labor until they keep their promises and scrap compulsory income management for good.”

Greens amendments

Amendment sheet 1966 is here, linked on this page https://www.aph.gov.au/Parliamentary_Business/Bills_LEGislation/Bills_Search_Results/Result?bId=r6989 

  • Item 1 – imposes a sunset date for compulsory income management. This is based on the 18 month consultation period outlined by the Minister in a media release of September 2022.
  • Item 2 – requires regular reporting on the costs of the SmartCard scheme. This reflects the Labor party’s focus in opposition on the costs of the Cashless Debit Card.
  • Item 3 – requires regular review by the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights. Given the significant concerns that have been raised about human rights, this is a basic step that we think is a small step towards what’s needed.
  • Item 4 – requires review by the Community Affairs Committee of the use of Ministerial powers. Given that the bill significantly expands the Ministerial power to roll out income management in new areas, we think this is a basic oversight.
  • Item 5 – enables an exit clause for people at risk of harm from the card. There was an exit clause from the Cashless Debit Card, for those at risk of harm; but none in the SmartCard legislation – so we think this is a very straightforward step.